Ignorance Coupled with Intellectual Hubris

I used to think that the problem of information is that it turns homo sapiens into fools — we gain disproportionately in confidence, particularly in domains where information is wrapped in a high degree of noise (say, epidemiology, genetics, economics, etc.). So we end up thinking that we know more than we do, which, in economic life, causes foolish risk taking. When I started trading, I went on a news diet and I saw things with more clarity. I also saw how people built too many theories based on sterile news, the fooled by randomness effect. But things are a lot worse. Now I think that, in addition, the supply and spread of information turns the world into Extremistan...

...Look at this current economic crisis that started in 2008: there are about a million persons on the planet who identify themselves in the field of economics. Yet just a handful realized the possibility and depth of what could have taken place and protected themselves from the consequences. At no time in the history of mankind have we lived under so much ignorance (easily measured in terms of forecast errors) coupled with so much intellectual hubris. At no point have we had central bankers missing elementary risk metrics, like debt levels, that even the Babylonians understood well.

Notes:

When we work with knowledge wrapped in complexity, we grow overly confident. Economics is a perfect example.

Folksonomies: technology knowledge

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Concepts:
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Thought (0.598702): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Knowledge (0.562988): dbpedia | freebase
Randomness (0.561516): dbpedia | freebase
Fooled by Randomness (0.539867): dbpedia | freebase | yago
Finance (0.513746): dbpedia | freebase
Economics (0.487158): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Confidence (0.448215): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc

 The Degradation of Predictability - And Knowledge
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Taleb, Nassim N. (January, 2010), The Degradation of Predictability - And Knowledge, Edge Foundation, Inc., Retrieved on 2010-10-01
  • Source Material [edge.org]
  • Folksonomies: internet technology society